Highlands Current Audio Stories
Future use remains uncertain Despite a push from Rep. Mike Lawler and the U.S. Department of Energy, a restart at the Indian Point nuclear power plant seems increasingly unlikely. Doing so would require unanimous approval from five entities, three of which — New York State, Westchester County and the Town of Cortlandt — have repeatedly voiced their opposition to nuclear power being produced there. (The other parties are the Village of Buchanan and the Hendrick Hudson school district.) As a result, five years after the plant powered down, the question of what will be built there — and when — remains unanswered. The question arose again at the June 18 meeting of the Indian Point Decommissioning Oversight Board (DOB) when Matt Johnson of Holtec, the company decommissioning the plant, shared a schedule that listed 2041 as the goal for "partial site release." A full site release will require removing casks of spent nuclear fuel, but the federal government has not built a storage facility for them. Holtec had planned to release the grounds around a former training building, but discovered in 2024 that it was contaminated with cesium-137. Johnson said the company doesn't know when that release will happen. "I would say we're quite a bit away," he said. Legislators Call on Hochul to Sign Funding Bill Dana Levenberg, whose state Assembly district includes Philipstown, and state Sen. Pete Harckham this week called on Gov. Kathy Hochul to sign a bill that would extend, for another five years, funding for school districts and municipalities that lose tax revenue when a local power plant shuts down. Levenberg and Harckham, whose districts include Indian Point, are members of the Decommissioning Oversight Board. Surrounded by kindergartners at Buchanan-Verplanck Elementary School on Tuesday (June 23), the legislators said that the Electric Generation Facility Cessation Fund had been a lifeline to the Hendrick Hudson school district after the closure of Indian Point. However, the fund is set to expire in 2028. "Closing Indian Point has made our communities safer, but it has also meant a big loss in tax dollars," said Levenberg. Their bill passed in the Senate, 60-1, with support from Rob Rolison, whose district includes Philipstown and Beacon, and in the Assembly, 131-0, with support from Levenberg and Jonathan Jacobson, whose district includes Beacon. At the December 2025 meeting of the Oversight Board, Hendrick Hudson Superintendent Michael Tromblee said that the 2021 shutdown resulted in the loss of nearly a third of the district's operating budget because of the loss of property taxes paid by the plant. He warned that without continued funding, the district would have to consider cuts such as eliminating sports or merging with another district. At the federal level, a bill known as the STRANDED Act (Sensible, Timely Relief for America's Nuclear Districts' Economic Development) would allow municipalities with nuclear plants to tax spent fuel stored on-site. Theresa Knickerbocker, the mayor of Buchanan, said at the June 18 meeting of the Oversight Board that, after years of negotiation, the STRANDED Act appears to be dead, but that Rep. Mike Lawler introduced a similar bill in March, the Economic Recovery for Nuclear-Affected Communities Act. "The communities that are being stranded with this spent fuel should be compensated for the storage of it," said Knickerbocker. "We never agreed to store the spent fuel. The original agreement, when the power plant went in, was not to store it, so this is on the Department of Energy." Emiljuana Ulaj, a Westchester County legislator who is a member of the Decommissioning Oversight Board, said she viewed "full decommissioning" as meaning "people can live here. Someone is able to have a garden. Is that possible?" Tom Congdon, the Oversight Board chair, cited a 2018 study by the Indian Point Closure Task Force (which he also chaired) that advised against building homes at Indian Point. The study also...
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